Here's the
story of my facial basal cell carcinoma and Mohs
surgery.
I first noticed what looked like a pimple
about 10 years ago, except it never went to head,
nor went away. It grew slowly at first, then
developed the classic rolled edge with a center
depression. At that point, not knowing what it was,
I could and did squeeze it and get bunches of what
looked like tiny, clustered balls of pearly
semi-solid gel.
(Note the small black dot below and to the right of
the nose, along the crease of the cheek)
In May of 2005, at the constant
nagging of my boyfriend, I finally made an
appointment through my HMO to see a skin specialist.
He suspected basal cell cancer, took a very tiny
biopsy and gave me the result that it was *not*
cancerous. However, he recommended I see a
dermatologist. My HMO arranged for one out in
Woodland Hills.
I went to that appointment and the
lady took one look at the basal and said it looked
like a large basal cell carcinoma. I told her a
biopsy had already been taken and that the result
was negative. She told me she wanted to do her own
biopsy. That one was awful. The first didn't hurt,
and he took very little. This one, I bruised on my
face from nose to ear, and swelled like crazy as you
can see from the picture taken 2 hours after.
(This was just from the biopsy)
The results of that one were
positive, so I was scheduled for Mohs surgery in
August of 2005. I told the doctor just how large the
affected area was, and even showed her by telling
her to feel inside my mouth and outside at the same
time. She gave me a condescending half-laugh, and
scheduled a 4 stage Mohs with a surgical closure,
meaning she would simply sew the wound closed after
finishing.
6 hours and 5 stages into the
surgery, my doctor was frantic. It was 3:30 in the
afternoon and she had not yet achieved a clean
slide. I began helping by telling her when I could
hear healthy tissue being cut, as cancerous tissue
makes a gritty sound and feel when sliced. By about
5:45 and the 7th stage, she declared a clean slide
and just about dropped a brick from her scrubs at
the size of the wound. She began faxing my HMO,
saying a normal surgical closure was impossible and
I needed plastic surgery reconstruction. I had not
yet seen the wound myself, nor had my boyfriend. She
packed the inside of the hole with dry gauze and
covered it with tape, and sent me home saying that
the plastic surgery needed to be started by 10 days'
time, but that I was NOT to mess with the gauze or
wound in the meantime. She herself wanted to see me
back in 2 days.
A day and a half later I was in the
emergency room - lethargic, weak, could barely get
around. The emergency room doctors ended up peeling
crusted and hardened gauze from out of the wound
where it had firmly cemented itself to the inside.
They did this without anesthesia of any type. I have
never felt anything as painful before or since,
including my ectopic pregnancy and appendicitis. My
boyfriend was there, and he burst into tears when he
finally saw for the first time what had been done to
my face. It was getting infected, which was what
caused my reaction. I was sent home. I called my
doctor that evening. She basically said that since
the emergency room had removed the gauze, she didn't
need to see me back.
(After surgery)
My HMO scheduled a consultation with
another doctor. He took one look and said he wasn't
the man for the job, since he specialized in small
plastic surgery corrections and enhancements, not
large reconstructive work. He refused the job and
recommended another doctor. My HMO chose a center
out in Topanga Canyon. This was now 2 weeks out from
the surgery. Nobody had told me what to do with the
wound. Nobody. Luckily I am proactive, and had
researched online for hours before deciding to treat
it like a large 3rd degree burn in order to keep the
wound moist and granulating new flesh from the
bottom, up. About 5 times a day I would flush it
with saline and then cover the entire site with a
burn cover which has gel to keep burns from
crusting. It was filling nicely with new tissue, but
hurt nearly constantly. Regular "bolts" of sharp
pain would shoot through the area too.
(One week after surgery)
The new place scheduled me for a
consultation about 2 weeks later. I saw them only
briefly. Their main concern was having me sign a
paper that promised I wouldn't sue them. They
scheduled me to come back the following week. Now I
assumed that was going to be the day of my
reconstruction, so I prepared mentally for it as
best I could. My boyfriend took me. We discovered
that NO...it was just so the actual doctor could
take a look. By this time the wound was nearly
healed. She said she'd have her assistant call me
with a surgery date.
Three WEEKS later, I got a call from
her snotty assistant saying they had decided they
did not want to do the surgery after all. She said
it was because she didn't think I could stop smoking
(which I already had). She didn't care that I
already had. I was very angry. I informed her that
they ran their business in a shoddy manner, and that
they had had the prior three weeks to call and let
me know this, which would have allowed me to find a
new doctor before the wound completely healed over,
which it had. She laughed at me, and I told her to
kiss my @$$.
(As you can see, the hole is larger than my eye)
My HMO gave me the name of a new
doctor. As always, I looked him up on google...and
couldn't find anything. Not even a hint of his name
or doctor's office or even certification. I found
that seriously alarming. I called my HMO and told
them that I was NOT comfortable seeing someone who
to all intents and purposes, didn't exist,
especially after everything I had been through
already. I was told I couldn't see any of the people
I had already been to, even though they were all
part of my HMO. The man told me they would have to
get special permission, and they'd call me back.
I never heard from them again.
The end.
(The scar from the surgery)
Yeah, it was quite the experience. I
went from having no fear of doctors whatsoever, to
being terrified of them. I already told my boyfriend
that if I ever got another basal, I'd either cut it
off myself or just let it grow. Nobody holding a
scalpel is allowed near me again in life, unless I
am unconscious and don't know about it. Then I
started hearing about Cansema(black salve) and
bloodroot, and started reading. I found what was
obviously another basal cancer on my scalp. It was
growing fairly rapidly once it diverted a couple
blood vessels for supply. I purchased some salve,
and here we are! The site on my head doesn't hurt
any longer. I removed the ball of salve last night.
It had been raised to the touch, but right now feels
nearly level with my scalp. We'll see how it goes,
but I am hopeful indeed. Whatever does happen, it
cannot be worse than my horror show in 2005.
I hope this information helps
someone!
-M